Sokolow v. City of Hope

262 P.2d 841, 41 Cal. 2d 668, 1953 Cal. LEXIS 316
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 10, 1953
DocketL. A. 22812
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 262 P.2d 841 (Sokolow v. City of Hope) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sokolow v. City of Hope, 262 P.2d 841, 41 Cal. 2d 668, 1953 Cal. LEXIS 316 (Cal. 1953).

Opinion

SCHAUER, J.

Plaintiffs, husband and wife, appeal from an adverse judgment entered upon a directed verdict in their action to recover damages resulting from personal injuries suffered by plaintiff wife 1 when she tripped and fell to the floor. We have concluded that the evidence is sufficient to support a verdict in plaintiffs’ favor, and that the judgment should be reversed. Purported appeals from the verdict and from an order denying plaintiffs’ motion for a new trial, being from nonappealable orders, must be dismissed. (Sawyer v. Sunset Mut. Life Ins. Co. (1937), 8 Cal.2d 492, 501 [66 P.2d 641].)

The only defendant is City of Hope, a California corporation and charitable organization. On March 4, 5 and 6, 1950, the “Central Jewish Committee” (hereinafter sometimes termed the committee), which the record indicates was formed as an “auxiliary” of defendant, held an annual “Town Fair” at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles, which the committee had rented for the occasion. The net proceeds of the fair were to be given to defendant. Plaintiff’s fall occurred while she was acting as a volunteer waitress at the fair, serving foods and coffee.

Defendant’s motion for a directed verdict was made upon the grounds, among others, that “there is no showing or evidence of any negligence on the part of this defendant which *670 was the proximate cause of the accident in question,” and that “there is no evidence that the defendant or its agents, if any, exercised any control over the Town Fair [of 1950] or had a right to exercise any such control, . . . [or] that the Central Jewish Committee was, at the time of the accident in question, acting as the agent of the defendant City of Hope.” The trial court stated, as the ground for granting defendant’s motion, that “The Court feels that the agency has not been satisfactorily shown to hold the City of Hope as a corporation liable for the accident that the evidence shows took place.”

Inasmuch as the motion for a directed verdict presented to the trial court the grounds both of insufficiency of evidence to show negligence constituting a proximate cause of the accident and of like insufficiency of the evidence to establish any agency connection of the committee with the defendant, the judgment predicated upon such verdict will be affirmed if the court’s action was proper upon either of such grounds. (See United Air Services, Ltd. v. Sampson (1938), 30 Cal.App.2d 135, 138 [86 P.2d 366].)

As stated in Burlingham v. Gray (1943), 22 Cal.2d 87, 94 [137 P.2d 9], “A court may direct a verdict only when, disregarding conflicting evidence and giving plaintiff’s evidence all the value to which it is legally entitled, indulging in every legitimate inference which may be drawn therefrom, the result is a determination that there is no evidence of sufficient substantiality to support a verdict in favor of the plaintiff. [Citations.] (See, also, Baber v. Tumin (1951), 36 Cal.2d 654, 656 [226 P.2d 574] [nonsuit] ; Martin v. Food Machinery Corp. (1950), 100 Cal.App.2d 244, 252 [223 P.2d 293] [rule same on nonsuit and on directed verdict motions].)

Thus viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to plaintiff, it appears that in performing work as an unpaid volunteer waitress plaintiff customarily stood behind a table (sometimes termed a “booth”) some 30 feet long by 4 feet wide and passed food and coffee across the table to her customers. Other similar tables were set up in the same room. To provide fuel for cooking, an exposed gas pipe line had been installed, running along the surface of the floor and underneath the tables. Areas some 3 to 4 feet wide existed between the ends of plaintiff’s table and the ends of the tables nearest thereto; in such areas no covering or other device was installed to prevent tripping over the gas pipe running along the floor. A vice-president of the committee testified that *671 “I am the chairman for installing Town Fair . . . for the City of Hope,” including the booths or tables and “the gas pipe installations for heat . . . And for serving coffee and the like”; that for 14 years he had supervised installations of the gas pipes, which had always been “laid the same way,” although in previous years exposed areas of the pipe had been covered with boards or a “ramp” to prevent tripping; for the 1950 Town Fair (during which plaintiff was injured) he had not, because he was called away by the death of his wife, given orders to his “working group . . . regarding any installations of the pipe or covering the pipe.”

Plaintiff’s accident occurred on Sunday, March 5. She testified, “Well, it was between 2 and 3 o’clock in the afternoon and the crowd was very big and everyone wanted to eat at the same time. They all come and clamored for food and they wanted it so I served—I had a party of about ten and I served them sandwiches of different kinds; and then they went to sit down at the table further down than the table where we worked. And while standing there and working, one man hollered out, ‘Hand me a cup of coffee, please.’ And I took the cup and the urn was right near me with the coffee already done. I took that cup of coffee and I was going out [around the corner of the table] to hand it to the man because they were at the table; and as I reached the corner of the stand wherever the table was, I felt I was falling. I tripped on something. I felt I was falling and I tried to prevent myself, but I couldn’t. That is all I know . . . Until after they woke me up. I fell. I don’t know what happened ... I didn’t know what I fell over . . .” Plaintiff also testified that “I can’t say whether” the floor was made of concrete or wood. Mrs. Greenberg testified that she was working beside plaintiff, behind the same table; that “I was standing there making those hamburgers, and Mrs. Sokolow was standing and she was drawing the coffee. And as she turned, I seen her fall”; that plaintiff as she was going out to serve the coffee fell in the area between the end of her booth or table and that of the next table; that the witness had had “occasion to go through the same area that day . . . and I almost fell myself . . . I almost tripped.”

The record discloses no other witnesses to the fall and no other evidence as to its cause. Defendant urges that plaintiff has thus failed to produce any evidence from which a jury could determine what or whose negligence was responsible for *672 the fall, that “Under the evidence, she could as easily have tripped and fallen by reason of twisting her foot in turning or caught her foot against the table leg or tripped upon her dress or apron or other apparel, etc.,” and that any verdict in favor of plaintiff would necessarily have been founded upon guess, conjecture and speculation as to the proximate cause of her fall.

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Bluebook (online)
262 P.2d 841, 41 Cal. 2d 668, 1953 Cal. LEXIS 316, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sokolow-v-city-of-hope-cal-1953.